Prix Godecharle

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The Godecharle prize or the Godecharle contest is a contest for art students, the winners of which are granted a scholarship allocated by the Godecharle Foundation. The conditions for participation are that contestants are less than 35 years old, of Belgian nationality, or members of a country of the European Community who have lived in Belgium for at least five years.

Napoléon Godecharle (1803-1875) created the Godecharle Foundation on the 15th of March 1871 in remembrance of his father, the prominent sculptor Gilles-Lambert Godecharle and with the aim of promoting the education and the career of young Belgian artists, either sculptors, painters or architects.

To this end, the Godecharle foundation organizes every other year a contest better-known under its French name, the Prix Godecharle (the 'Godecharleprijs' in Dutch).

The prize allows young talents, unknown before the award, to become recognized by a panel of experts made up of famous artists. The renown of the contest is based, amongst other things, upon the reputation of the artists who sit on the jury.

The foundation has entrusted a provincial board, the so-called Commission provinciale des Fondations de bourses d’études du Brabant with the management of the contest and the follow-up exhibitions of the works of participants.

The Godecharle bursaries are allocated by this board, on proposals made up by a jury of renowned artists.

The contest[]

The first contest was organized in 1881. At the start, the competition took place every three years on the occasion of the Salons triennaux des Beaux-Arts de Bruxelles in Belgium. Because of the First World War, the contest was adjourned until 1921. Since 1933, it is held every two years.

The laureates win prize money of 5,000 euros, granted in two instalments over two years. In accordance with its founder’s wishes, the winners have to spend this money on travelling abroad in order to improve their education or to conduct research, traditionally in Italy, the ceaseless return to Renaissance sources.

The jury[]

Many famous painters, sculptors and architects of these last hundred years have accepted to be members of the jury of the Godecharle contest.[1]

Some of them are internationally recognized, including Emile Claus, Paul Delvaux, Léon Frédéric, Fernand Khnopff, Constant Permeke, Jean Brusselmans, Louis Van Lint, Victor Bourgeois, and Pierre Alechinsky.

The successful careers of some of the winners also boosted the renown of this contest. These winners included personalities such as Victor Horta, , Victor Rousseau, , Tom Frantzen, , Guillaume Van Strydonck, Éliane de Meuse, , Alfred Bastien and .

A significant milestone in the history of the contest was the first grant of the prize to a female sculptor in 1921. The winner Éliane de Meuse was only twenty-two years old when she won the prize.[2] and the awarding panel comprised the Belgian symbolist , Armand Rassenfosse and the Belgian neo-impressionist Emile Claus. The winning work, entitled Daphnis et Chloé was of an impressive size, i.e. 225 cm by 180 cm, and depicted a naked young couple in an embrace. In his report to the Minister, the chairman of the panel highlighted the stylistic qualities of the composition.[3]

The laureates[]

The laureates of the Prix Godecharle from 1881 to the present.

Year Sculpture Painting Architecture
1881 Eugène Broerman
1884 Paul Du Bois Guillaume Van Strydonck Victor Horta
1887 José Dierickx
1890 Victor Rousseau Auguste Leveque
1894 and
1897 and Alfred Bastien
1900 and
1903
1907
1910
1913
1921 Éliane de Meuse was the first woman to win the Godecharle Prize [4]
1924
1926 [5]
1928
1931 Peter Colfs and
1933
1935 and Renaat Braem
1937
1939
1941
1943
1945
1947
1949
1951
1953
1955
1957
1959
1961
1963
1965
1967
1969
1971 and
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981 Tom Frantzen Christian Kieckens
1983 and
1985
1987 Daniel Colin
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997 , (mention) , (mention) , (mention)
1999
2001 Vincent Callebaut and
2003 Denis Mahin , (mention), (mention) , (mention), (mention), (mention)
2005 Nick Ervinck, (mention) , (mention), (mention)
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015 Ronja Schlickmann Hadrien Bruyaux Evelyne Baeten
2017 Conrad Willems Charlotte Flamand Wouter Verstraete

External links[]

  • Fondation Godecharle [3] (in French and in Dutch)
  • List of the artists and jury members of the Prix Godecharle since its creation [4]
  • New York Public Library. Art and Architecture Division. Bibliographic guide to art and architecture. G. K. Hall., 1977. [5]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ (in French) A. Massin, W. Demulder, P. Bijtebier, Chr. Dehennin et Henri Kessels Les Concours Godecharle ont cent ans 1881-1981 Eliane de Meuse p.36 Dépôt légal D/1981/1758/3 - "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2013-08-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Benezit Dictionary of Artists Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs de tous les temps et de tous les pays, édition refondue sous la direction de Jacques BUSSE, Editions Gründ – 60 rue Mazarine – 75006 Paris - 1999 - Dépôt legal: mars 1999, ISBN 978-2-7000-3049-5 (Tome 9) Meuse de, Eliane, for Eliane de Meuse p. 554
  3. ^ (in French) , Éliane de Meuse monography, p 7 et (in French) , dictionnaire des artistes plasticiens de Belgique des XIXe et XXe siècles, volume 3, p. 235-238
  4. ^ (in French) Alexia Creusen, Femmes artistes en Belgique XIXe et début XXe siècle, p. 120 – 2007 Publisher L'Harmattan, Paris, France ISBN 978-2-296-03372-6 [1]. This author of this study is doctor in philosophy of styles and scientist assistant at Université of Liège. She contributed to the dictionary of the Belgian women, French title : Dictionnaire des femmes belges – 2006 – Editions Racine ISBN 2-87386-434-6 [2]
  5. ^ JEANNE Louise MILDE (in Portuguese)
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